A great and necessary book for those who follow Christ.
Discontent is a besetting sin of so many of us, ironically in a day when we live in abscess amounts of wealth. Watson makes the point that increased riches often leads to increased discontent. None of us is as well off as we’d like to be, but we should not bemoan our “poverty,” whatever that might look like, but realize that God uses trials to draw sin out of us and bring us closer to him. Therefore we ought to be content.
One of the main points of Watson throughout this book is that if we actually live by faith that God loves us and has our best interest in mind, we will live contentedly. God is not cruel, and he does not forget about us. He uses every little piece of our lives for our good and His glory. He is shaping us into the men and women we will be in the Resurrection. This should cause us to live contended in every situation.
I’m adding this to my list of yearly re-reads, as I think it’s a reminder we need often.
Some great quotes:
“Here is the difference between a holy complaint and a discontented complaint: in the one we complain to God, in the other we complain of God.”
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“Whatever our condition is, God, the umpire of the world, has, from everlasting, decreed that condition for us and, by His providence, ordered all that comes with it.”
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“one man thinks a country life is best, another a city life. The soldier thinks it best to be a merchant, and the merchant thinks it better to be a soldier. People can be content to be anything except what God would have them to be.”
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“You would think it was excellent if I could prescribe a recipe or antidote against poverty, but here is something that is even more excellent: for a man to be in need and yet have enough. Only contentment of spirit can bring this.”
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“He who studies his sins, the numberless number of them, how they are twisted together and accented with sadness, is patient and says, “I will bear the indignation of the Lord because I have sinned against Him.” The greater noise drowns the lesser; when the sea roars, the rivers are still. He who thinks long about his sin is both silent and amazed; he wonders why it is not worse with him.”
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“Poverty will starve out our sins, and the sickness of the body will cure a sin-sick soul, so instead of murmuring and being discontent, bless the Lord! If you had not encountered such friction in the way, you might have rolled on into hell and never stopped”
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“It is not having food and clothing that will make us content, but having faith.”
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“He who has God to be his God is so content with his condition that he does not much care whether he has anything else. To rest in a condition where a Christian cannot say God is his God is a matter of fear; if he can say so truly but yet is not content, it is a matter of shame.”